Archdeacon Habib Girgis (departed on 21 August 1951) was a modern-day dean of the Catechetical School of Alexandria.
Habib Girgis was born in Cairo in 1876.
He was the very first student for the modern-day Theological School, and was thus appointed to succeed his predecessor, Youssef Bey Mankarious, in the year 1918, as the second dean of the renewed center of theology.
Before he became the head of renowned Theological Seminary, Habib Girgis felt that preaching and adult education were not sufficient enough for the advancement of the Coptic Orthodox Church. Protestant and Catholic Missionaries have been at work since the mid-nineteenth century, with the aim to radically the views of the Copts and abandon their long lasting faith in Oriental Orthodoxy. Thus, with many issues at hand, Habib Girgis decided to establish Sunday schools at the turn of the twentieth century as a means of satisfying the need for education. As a result, Coptic Orthodox Sunday schools were founded in major cities in Egypt in the year 1900—15 years before there were even Egyptian public schools. The Sunday school movement flourished in Egypt after much hard work, and now, Coptic studies thrive in Egypt and abroad.
As Habib Girgis saw it, the interest of young children were the true foundations of Sunday schools, and by 1900, Sunday school was the main pillar for the renaissance of Coptic Orthodox Christianity in the twentieth century until present, thanks in part to the hard work of Habib Girgis and other famous modern-day Sunday school teachers in the Coptic Church. Coptic churches and villages throughout Egypt at the start of the twentieth century felt that they needed to include better curriculum and more textbooks. By the year 1899, Pope Cyril V issued the need to teach children to learn and deepen their faith, as Habib Girgis visualized the need for raising children in accordance with the teachings of Christianity and the spirit of faithful patriotism.
Habib Girgis worked to restructure Sunday school curricula significantly, as he had striven to do what he did eventually: to improve academic standards.
Pope Kyrillos VI appointed the late Habib Girgis, who
was the dean of the theological seminary, to be his deacon. He dedicated his
life to the seminary and its improvement. Mr. Girgis assisted the Pope in
expanding its buildings in Mahmasha. Pope Kyrillos often visited the seminary
and blessed its students. This deacon was a skillful speaker. He accompanied
the Pope in his pastoral visits to Upper Egypt and Sudan. He translated many
religious books from foreign languages to Arabic and published El-Karma
periodical, to spread the facts of the faith in a positive way. He published
many books, among them were: The Seven Sacraments of the Church, The Consoler
of the Faithful, The Mystery of Piety, and many others. He taught and nurtured
many generations of clergymen who flourished in the church and filled it with
their sermons and religious publications.